Reflections
on Ramadaan
In the name of Allah the most Beneficent, the Most Merciful : "O
ye who believe! Fasting is prescribed to you, As it was prescribed
To those before you, That ye may (learn) Self -restraint (Fasting)
for a fixed Number of days; But if any of you is ill, Or on a journey,
The prescribed number (Should be made up) From days later, For those
who can do it (With hardship), is a ransom, The feeding of one That
is indigent. But he that will give More, of his own free will It
is better for him. And it is better for you That ye fast. If ye
only knew." (Surah 2: Al Baqarah, 183-184)
Islam proceeded step by step and by degrees in the imposition of
most of its obligatory duties and Fasting was no exception. The
Noble Prophet (sallallahu alaiyhi wassallam) advised Muslims to
observe fasts for three days in a month but this was not obligatory.
Then in the second year of Hijra, the Command(2:183) about fasting
in the month of Ramadan was revealed. Verse 185 in Surah Al Baqarah
was revealed next year. The first Commandment about fasting contained
in verses. 183-184 was revealed in the second year of Hijrah before
the battle of Badr. The subsequent verse which superseded it was
revealed a year later but was inserted here because it dealt with
the same matter.
Siyam or Fasting during the month of Ramadan is Third Pillar of
Islam. Muslims wait all year long for the arrival of this month
of Ramadan. Fasting means that from dawn until sunset eating, drinking
and sexual intercourse are forbidden. Ramadan is the month of patience.
A person who is ready to be patient, not to eat while he is hungry,
not to drink while he is thirsty, not to lean to his lusts, such
a person is a noble individual. Such a person will be given paradise
by God as a gift, as a merit of award.
To train yourself to abstain from the essentials of life is not
an easy act. It needs a strong personality to dictate self-control,
self-discipline and self-restraint. Fasting develops self-control
and helps Muslims overcome selfishness, greed, laziness and other
faults. It is an annual training program to refresh us for carrying
out our duties towards Allah. A person who can restrain himself,
for the love and pleasure of Allah, deserves a reward from the Creator
Himself. The hardship of fasting brings the glad tidings that the
fasting undertaken for the sole purpose of pleasing Allah is sure
to be accepted by the Most Merciful Lord.
Fast in which the spirit of Fasting is not observed is only an exercise
in starvation but not really a Fast at all. The prophet (sallallahu
alaiyhi wassallam) said “ whosoever does not give up telling
lies, or acting in a false manner, Allah has no need for his giving
up his eating or drinking.”
The basic purpose of Fasting is to suffuse us with the quality of
taqwa. The term “taqwa” implies fear and precaution
and in Islamic terminology it means fear of God or God Consciousness
and avoidance of disobedience to Him. Literally, taqwa means: Godliness,
devotees or piety. According to the scientific meaning, it signifies
a screen between two things. Thus, if the servant submits himself
to Allah’s will by carrying out all obligatory duties with
which he has been commanded and abstains from that which Allah has
prohibited, then his obedient actions have placed a screen between
himself and Allah’s punishment. That is called taqwa.
In our life journey we face innumerable temptations and we must
shun them and stick scrupulously to the path of righteousness and
truth- that is what constitutes taqwa, and for generating this taqwa.
Taqwa is attained through knowledge which is coupled with true faith
(iman). If we do not possess knowledge, we cannot really show piety.
To obey the commands of Allah and to carry out His laws constitutes
taqwa. Fasting has been made obligatory on us. We are made conscious
about the needs and deprivation of those who are more in need than
ourselves. This heightening of one’s sense of sacrifice is
the opposite of selfishness and of a desire to exploit or oppress
someone for the sake of gain. Allah does not need our hunger, but
fasting helps us to develop and refine our reflex about right and
wrong, our sense of love and gratitude. Ramadan teaches us how to
control our animal passions, how to bring them under discipline.
The end result is manifestation of a human personality that loves
Allah and loves His creation, that fears none but Allah, that draws
all its strength from God and God alone.
Ramadan is also the month of the Qur’an, the month in which
the Qur’an was revealed. The moral and spiritual climate of
Ramadan helps the flourishing of the Qur’anic message which
the ambiance is of goodness, humility, righteousness, love for good
and aversion for evil.
Benefits of Siyaam
Besides the feeling of hunger and thirst, fasting teaches us to
control the love of comfort. It helps us to keep our sexual desires
within control. Siyaam builds and nourishes the soul of the fasting
Muslim. The fasting person enriches his fasting by the remembrance
of God, the recitation of the Qur’an, the night prayers, Zakah,
Sadaqah (charity), and by refraining from sins and obscenity. The
fasting person lowers his gaze and suppresses his desires. He guards
his tongue from vain talk and obscenities. He guards his hands and
legs from the prohibitions of Allah. He employs his hands and legs
in the good and various deeds. Siyaam is not the mere refraining
from eating and drinking, it is also refraining from vanity and
obscenity. Siyaam builds a strong will and nourishes the truthful
zeal in the soul. This is achieved when the fasting person struggles
to work for his livelihood and resists his desires and temptations.
Siyaam builds the strength to bear difficulties and hardship and
instills the character of perseverance. The fasting person by depriving
himself from food and drink, and other necessities of life becomes
capable of controlling his desires, capricious whims, and temptations.
The purpose of fasting is to enable a Muslim to control his passions,
so that he becomes a person of good deeds and intentions. If one
fasts from dawn to sunset, but continues to be abusive to one’s
spouse and children, tell lies, swears wrongly under oath, commits
zina (fornication), cheats one’s children by not giving them
what is duly theirs of nafaqah in the form of care and love and
indulges in other wrongful acts, then the objective of fasting has
not been achieved. Anger, a common human weakness, can also be brought
under control by fasting. A Muslim should keep away from all bad
actions during his fast. He should not lie, break a promise or do
any deceitful act. Fasting in Ramadan helps one to develop good
habits and suppress or eliminate bad habits such as smoking, drinking
coffee, tea, etc. One can avoid or cut down on excessive consumption
of food.
A fasting person has feelings of sympathy for the poor. The sense
of compassion springs from the feeling of pain. Fasting is a practical
means to develop compassion for other people’s sufferings.
The Prophet Muhammad (sallallahu alaiyhi wassallam) himself was
very generous during Ramadan.
Ramadan instills unity and equality among all the members of the
Muslim ummah. The Muslims fast during the same month, perform qiyaam
al lail during the nights of this month and all seek the night of
Qadr. They offer zakat-ul-fitr at the end of the month and celebrate
Eid-ul-Fitr together. By doing this together during this month of
Ramadan, the ummah becomes like one body living in harmony. The
fasting person is alert and cautious not to fall into something
that might spoil his or her fasting or seek the wrath of Allah.
Fasting elevates the person from the material life to a higher spiritual
life and helps him or her to approach a spiritual level that of
angels who worship God day and night without tiredness.
Fasting builds important Islamic values, such as compassion, cooperation,
diligence, firmness, affection, fear of Allah, trust in Allah, and
many other qualities. Fasting establishes equality among the rich
and the poor. It is a compulsory experience of poverty in that it
makes all people share an quality, of feeling and to sympathize
with one another through a collective sense of pain. Fasting Muslims
can really sympathize with the starving people everywhere in the
world and see the hardship that they go through every day of their
lives. This compassion increases the practical aspect of the unity
of Muslims and will reduce the idea of nationality and geographical
identity. God is pleased with his servants and answers the duaa
of the fasting person, when he supplicates to Him.
During the month of Ramadan, one should visit and offer prayers
more frequently in the local mosques. Ramadan is a special time
for visiting friends and family and sharing meals with the less
fortunate.
The Prophet (sallallahu alaiyhi wassallam) said, “ O people!
The month of Ramadan has come with His mercy, blessing and forgiveness.
God has decreed this month the best of all months. Its days are
the best among days, its nights best among nights, and its hours
best among hours. This is a month in which you have been invited
by Him to fast and pray. Allah has honored you in it. Every breath
you take in this month has the reward of praise of Allah. Your sleep
in worship, your good deeds are accepted and your invocations answered.
Therefore you must invoke your Lord in earnest, with hearts that
are free from sin and evil, and pray that Allah helps you fast,
and recite the Qur’an. Give alms to the poor and the needy.
Pay respect to your elders, have sympathy for your youngsters and
be kind toward your relatives and kinsfolk. Guard your tongue against
unworthy words, and your eyes from scenes that are not worth seeing
and your ears from sounds that should not be heard. Understand well
that God has promised in the Name of His Majesty and Honor that
He will not take to task such people who perform Salaat and Sajda
and that He will guard their bodies against the fire of hell on
the Day of Judgment.
O’ people! If anyone among you arranges Iftar for any believer,
then Allah will reward him and forgive him his previous sins. (A
companion of the prophet (sallallahu alaiyhi wassallam) asked: “But
not everyone among us have the means to do so.” The prophet
replied: “Do it even if it be with half a date or some water
if you have nothing else.”)
O’ people! Anyone who cultivates in this month good manners
will walk over the bridge leading to paradise on the day when feet
will tend to slip. Anyone who treats his kinsfolk well in it, Allah
will bestow His mercy on him on the Day of Judgment while anyone
who mistreats his kinsfolk, Allah will keep him away from His mercy.
Whoever recites a verse of the Qur’an in this month, his reward
will be that of reciting the whole Qur’an in other months.
O’ people! The gates of paradise remain open in this month:
pray to your Lord that they may not be closed for you. The gates
of hell are closed during this month: pray that they may never be
opened for you. Satan has been handcuffed: invoke your Lord not
to let him dominate you.”
May Allah make us become kinder people, better neighbors and set
good examples of the teachings of Islam which we present. Ameen!
By Ibrahim B. Syed, Ph.D
Source: irfiweb.org
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